Most mutable data is protected by a striped lock that is keyed on the
referenced object's address. The weakref's hash is protected using the
weakref's per-object lock.
Note that this only affects free-threaded builds. Apart from some minor
refactoring, the added code is all either gated by `ifdef`s or is a no-op
(e.g. `Py_BEGIN_CRITICAL_SECTION`).
Remove extra self DECREF on ssl "no ciphers" error path.
This doesn't come up in practice because nobody links against a broken
OpenSSL library that provides nothing.
Python 3.10 changed from using SSL_write() and SSL_read() to SSL_write_ex() and
SSL_read_ex(), but did not update handling of the return value.
Change error handling so that the return value is not examined.
OSError (not EOF) is now returned when retval is 0.
According to *recent* man pages of all functions for which we call
PySSL_SetError, (in OpenSSL 3.0 and 1.1.1), their return value should
be used to determine whether an error happened (i.e. if PySSL_SetError
should be called), but not what kind of error happened (so,
PySSL_SetError shouldn't need retval). To get the error,
we need to use SSL_get_error.
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
<pycore_time.h> include is no longer needed to get the PyTime_t type
in internal header files. This type is now provided by <Python.h>
include. Add <pycore_time.h> includes to C files instead.
* gh-114572: Fix locking in cert_store_stats and get_ca_certs
cert_store_stats and get_ca_certs query the SSLContext's X509_STORE with
X509_STORE_get0_objects, but reading the result requires a lock. See
https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/23224 for details.
Instead, use X509_STORE_get1_objects, newly added in that PR.
X509_STORE_get1_objects does not exist in current OpenSSLs, but we can
polyfill it with X509_STORE_lock and X509_STORE_unlock.
* Work around const-correctness problem
* Add missing X509_STORE_get1_objects failure check
* Add blurb
Remove LibreSSL specific workaround ifdefs from `_ssl.c` and delete the non-version-specific `_ssl_data.h` file (relevant for OpenSSL < 1.1.1, which we no longer support per PEP 644).
Co-authored-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
If OpenSSL was built without PSK support, the python TLS-PSK
methods will raise "NotImplementedError" if called.
Add a constant "ssl.HAS_PSK" to check if TLS-PSK is supported
Add support for TLS-PSK (pre-shared key) to the ssl module.
---------
Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <oleg@arhadthedev.net>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Remove _PyErr_ChainExceptions(), _PyErr_ChainExceptions1() and
_PyErr_SetFromPyStatus() functions from the public C API.
* Move the private _PyErr_ChainExceptions() and
_PyErr_ChainExceptions1() function to the internal C API
(pycore_pyerrors.h).
* Move the private _PyErr_SetFromPyStatus() to the internal C API
(pycore_initconfig.h).
* No longer export the _PyErr_ChainExceptions() function.
* Move run_in_subinterp_with_config() from _testcapi to
_testinternalcapi.
Functions like PyErr_SetFromErrno() and SetFromWindowsErr() should be
called immediately after using the C API which sets errno or the Windows
error code.
* gh-105293: Do not call SSL_CTX_set_session_id_context on client side SSL context
Openssl states this is a "server side only" operation.
Calling this on a client side socket can result in unexpected behavior
* Add news entry on SSL "set session id context" changes
Upgrade builds to OpenSSL 1.1.1u.
This OpenSSL version addresses a pile if less-urgent CVEs since 1.1.1t.
The Mac/BuildScript/build-installer.py was already updated.
Also updates _ssl_data_111.h from OpenSSL 1.1.1u, _ssl_data_300.h from 3.0.9, and adds a new _ssl_data_31.h file from 3.1.1 along with the ssl.c code to use it.
Manual edits to the _ssl_data_300.h file prevent it from removing any existing definitions in case those exist in some peoples builds and were important (avoiding regressions during backporting).
backports of this prior to 3.12 will not include the openssl 3.1 header.
* Support for conversion specifiers o (octal) and X (uppercase hexadecimal).
* Support for length modifiers j (intmax_t) and t (ptrdiff_t).
* Length modifiers are now applied to all integer conversions.
* Support for wchar_t C strings (%ls and %lV).
* Support for variable width and precision (*).
* Support for flag - (left alignment).
Here we are doing no more than adding the value for Py_mod_multiple_interpreters and using it for stdlib modules. We will start checking for it in gh-104206 (once PyInterpreterState.ceval.own_gil is added in gh-104204).
Prior to https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/25300, the
make_ssl_data.py script used various tables, exposed in _ssl, to update
the error list.
After that PR, this is no longer used. Moreover, the err_names_to_codes
map isn't used at all. Clean those up. This gets them out of the way if,
in the future, OpenSSL provides an API to do what the code here is doing
directly. (https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/19848)
In PEM, we need to parse until error and then suppress `PEM_R_NO_START_LINE`, because PEM allows arbitrary leading and trailing data. DER, however, does not. Parsing until error and suppressing `ASN1_R_HEADER_TOO_LONG` doesn't quite work because that error also covers some cases that should be rejected.
Instead, check `BIO_eof` early and stop the loop that way.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:Yhg1s
GH-25309 enabled SSL_OP_IGNORE_UNEXPECTED_EOF by default, with a comment
that it restores OpenSSL 1.1.1 behavior, but this wasn't quite right.
That option causes OpenSSL to treat transport EOF as the same as
close_notify (i.e. SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN), whereas Python actually has
distinct SSLEOFError and SSLZeroReturnError exceptions. (The latter is
usually mapped to a zero return from read.) In OpenSSL 1.1.1, the ssl
module would raise them for transport EOF and close_notify,
respectively. In OpenSSL 3.0, both act like close_notify.
Fix this by, instead, just detecting SSL_R_UNEXPECTED_EOF_WHILE_READING
and mapping that to the other exception type.
There doesn't seem to have been any unit test of this error, so fill in
the missing one. This had to be done with the BIO path because it's
actually slightly tricky to simulate a transport EOF with Python's fd
based APIs. (If you instruct the server to close the socket, it gets
confused, probably because the server's SSL object is still referencing
the now dead fd?)
Add `MS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP`, `MS_WINDOWS_APPS`, `MS_WINDOWS_SYSTEM` and `MS_WINDOWS_GAMES` preprocessor definitions to allow switching off functionality missing from particular API partitions ("partitions" are used in Windows to identify overlapping subsets of APIs).
CPython only officially supports `MS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP` and `MS_WINDOWS_SYSTEM` (APPS is included by normal desktop builds, but APPS without DESKTOP is not covered). Other configurations are a convenience for people building their own runtimes.
`MS_WINDOWS_GAMES` is for the Xbox subset of the Windows API, which is also available on client OS, but is restricted compared to `MS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP`. These restrictions may change over time, as they relate to the build headers rather than the OS support, and so we assume that Xbox builds will use the latest available version of the GDK.
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/89051
builtins and extension module functions and methods that expect boolean values for parameters now accept any Python object rather than just a bool or int type. This is more consistent with how native Python code itself behaves.
The wrapper macros are more readable and match the form recommended in
the OpenSSL documentation. They also slightly less error-prone, as the
mapping of arguments to SSL_CTX_ctrl is not always clear. (Though in
this case it's straightforward.)
https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.1.1/man3/SSL_CTX_get_max_proto_version.html
Remove dead code related to ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv2. ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv2
was already removed in Python 3.10.
In test_ssl, @requires_tls_version('SSLv2') always returned False.
Extract of the removed code: "OpenSSL has removed support for SSLv2".